Though the terms “challenger and
defender” are patterned on the idea of physical conflict, they can
be applied to any number of narrative forms, such as those involving
a conflict of expectations.
In THE BASE LEVEL OF CONFLICT I observed that
Bradbury’s short story “The Last Night of the World” as one
that has nearly no conflict in the “X vs. Y” sense. A man and
wife, the only characters in the story, become privy to the fact that
the world is about to come to an end. Yet instead of their
registering emotions of fear or frustration, the couple is totally
okay with such a transcendent doom, implicitly because it’s better
than the fate of nuclear annihilation. I noted in the essay that
because the story focuses on the characters’ mental turnabout
rather than on the phenomenon of the world’s death, so that in my
current terminology, the world’s doom is the thing that challenges
the select couple, and they are defenders not in the sense of rising
to the challenge, albeit only in the sense of professing their total
acceptance of their fate. Indeed, during my reading of Poe’s
complete prose works, I became aware that in some of his
vignettes—“Island of the Fay,” “The Oval Portrait”—the
viewpoint characters have even less internal conflict. In both
vignettes, the “defenders” are just windows into the author’s
perspective, as he illustrates how something fair devolves into
something foul.
The “conflict of expectations”
feeds into a trope I discussed in CHANGING PARTNERS IN THE MONSTER-DEMIHERO DANCE, where I surveyed the
use of the focal presence in a number of comic-book horror stories. I
remarked that there’s a dominant tendency for the “monster”—what Frank Cioffi calls “the anomaly”—to be the star of the story. “The
Gentle Old Man” overtly follows this tendency, while both “Grave
Rehearsal” and “Bridal Night” do so in more covert fashion. At
the beginning of each story, there’s an evil presence—respectively,
Madame Satin and Count Von Roemer— both of whom take the role of
“the challenger” and who seem more than able to overpower each of
the viewpoint characters, respectively B.S. Fitts and Helena Ayres.
But Ayres, though she is a defender, has greater power than Von
Roemer and easily defeats him. B.S. Fitts does the same to
Madame Satin, though Fitts only gains power after Satin has killed
him.
Some defenders are the stars precisely
because the evil in their nature calls up some sort of reciprocal
evil, and this pattern is seen in both “The Speed Demon” and “Den
of Horror.” The evils that doom both defenders fit the role of
challengers, but they have a subordinate role, not least because they
seem to evolve from the defender’s own nature, not unlike the
doppelganger in Poe’s “William Wilson.” At the same time, irony doesn't always imply consubstantiality, for Prince Prospero, despite the way he perishes while defending himself from the Red Death, is not the personified plague's sole victim.
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